The Advice Given During Near-Peer Interactions Before and After Curriculum Change

被引:1
|
作者
Huang, Kelly [1 ]
Mak, David [2 ]
Hafferty, Frederic W. [3 ,4 ]
Eva, Kevin W. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Emergency Med, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Radiat Oncol, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Mayo Clin, Div Gen Internal Med, Rochester, MN USA
[4] Mayo Clin, Program Professionalism & Values, Rochester, MN USA
[5] Univ British Columbia, Educ Res & Scholarship, Vancouver, BC, Canada
关键词
near peer interactions; curriculum change; medical school; medical education; knowledge transmission; peer support; MEDICAL-EDUCATION; STUDENTS; IMPACT; TRANSITIONS; RESIDENTS; BENEFITS;
D O I
10.1080/10401334.2021.1957685
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Phenomenon Near-peer interactions (NPIs) provide formal and informal mentorship that can allow medical students to share strategies for successful training. Such capacity to convey valuable advice, however, may depend on the similitude of experiences. Given that many factors can disrupt homogeneity, including curriculum renewal, we must better understand whether junior trainees feel disadvantaged when they do not have more senior peers with similar experiences. This study was, therefore, conducted to examine the focus of, and engagement with, advice available through NPIs during curriculum renewal. Approach: We used a generic exploratory qualitative research approach. Twenty MD undergraduate students, seven from the Class of 2019 (the first cohort post-curriculum change), and thirteen from the Class of 2020 (the first cohort with access to more senior students in the new curriculum), participated in semi-structured interviews. Anonymized transcriptions were analyzed with open, axial, and selective coding to generate themes until saturation was attained. Findings: Participants from the Class of 2019 reported having particularly few reasons to seek advice; because curriculum renewal disrupted their near peers' capacity to provide critical insights, students exerted little effort to learn from them. That said, this vacuum was not generally cause for concern. Deeper probing illustrated why: advice given during NPIs in both classes more commonly focused on nonacademic (e.g., work-life balance issues) than academic advice; academic advice, when sought or offered, tended not to be aimed at improving understanding of curriculum dependent content; and, while students in both classes welcomed advice, both were wary of accepting it at face value, precluding a sense of dependence on senior peers. Insights: Students' skepticism about the overall utility of academic advice raises a number of important issues for medical education and training. Positively, it shielded students from feeling loss when advice from similarly trained students was not available, reducing concerns about disadvantage that could arise during periods of curriculum revision. On the other hand, knowing that what students perceive and what educators claim to be important aspects of training can be at odds and knowing that self-assessment is flawed makes it surprising and unsettling, respectively, that participants so readily treated the lessons learned by those who came before them as irrelevant.
引用
收藏
页码:351 / 359
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Fostering interprofessional teamwork in an academic medical center: Near-peer education for students during gross medical anatomy
    Shields, Richard K.
    Pizzimenti, Marc A.
    Dudley-Javoroski, Shauna
    Schwinn, Debra A.
    ANATOMICAL SCIENCES EDUCATION, 2015, 8 (04) : 331 - 337
  • [32] Observed Interactions, Challenges, and Opportunities in Student-Led, Web-Based Near-Peer Teaching for Medical Students: Interview Study Among Peer Learners and Peer Teachers
    Chan, Evelyn Hui Yi
    Chan, Vernice Hui Yan
    Roed, Jannie
    Chen, Julie Yun
    JMIR MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2023, 9
  • [33] The Virtual OSCE Buddy Scheme (VOBS): Weekly Near-Peer Online Education During the Covid-19 Pandemic
    Johnstone, M.
    Paice, B.
    Goody, J.
    Oatham, A.
    Tellisi, F.
    Stackhouse, M.
    Gamble, C.
    Plews, E.
    Ozbek, L.
    Gray, K.
    JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, 2021, 255 : S36 - S36
  • [34] Eating Expectantly: Practical Advice for Healthy Eating Before, During and After Pregnancy
    Sergy, Lauren
    LIBRARY JOURNAL, 2013, 138 (09) : 104 - 104
  • [35] Change in the pharmacokinetics of lacosamide before, during, and after pregnancy
    Fukushima, Yutaro
    Yamamoto, Yoshiaki
    Yamazaki, Etsuko
    Imai, Katsumi
    Kagawa, Yoshiyuki
    Takahashi, Yukitoshi
    SEIZURE-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF EPILEPSY, 2021, 88 : 12 - 14
  • [36] Framing the conversation about rates before, during, and after a change
    Mueller, Deirdre (dmueller@awwa.org), 1600, Wiley-Blackwell (110):
  • [37] Should prophylactic antibiotics during caesarean section be given before or after cord clamping?
    Passingham, Louise
    Carle, Coralie
    Wiggans, Steve
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, 2011, 72 (02) : 118 - 118
  • [38] Framing the Conversation About Rates Before, During, and After a Change
    Gugliuzza, Mary L.
    Montoya-Halter, Christina
    Snyder, Karen
    Mueller, Deirdre
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 2018, 110 (02): : 65 - 69
  • [39] Increasing contrasting cases during exploration or practice problems given before or after instruction
    Decaro, Marci S.
    Bego, Campbell R.
    Velic, Lianda
    Newman, Phillip M.
    INSTRUCTIONAL SCIENCE, 2025, 53 (01) : 121 - 150
  • [40] Participation of 1st-Year Medical Undergraduate Students in an Anatomy Exhibition as ''Near-Peer'' Teachers - An Innovative Method to Implement Components of the Competency-based Curriculum in India
    Daniel, Priyanka
    Stephen, John Bino
    Stephen, Priyanka Clementina
    Rabi, Suganthy
    JOURNAL OF THE ANATOMICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA, 2022, 71 (02) : 102 - 108